Enter California's Proposition 37, which would require stores and vendors to label GMO foods. Already there is a giant list of companies (mostly outside California) who are contributing massively to the campaign to stop the labeling. Here are the biggest contributors to the "No on 37" campaign, who each donated more than $1 million. The list reads like a who's who of the US food and agribusiness industries:

MONSANTO COMPANY
$4,208,000.00

E.I. DUPONT DE NEMOURS & CO.
$4,025,200.00

PEPSICO, INC.
$1,716,300.00

BASF PLANT SCIENCE
$1,642,300.00

BAYER CROPSCIENCE
$1,618,400.00

DOW AGROSCIENCES LLC
$1,184,800.00

NESTLE USA, INC.
$1,169,400.00

COCA-COLA NORTH AMERICA
$1,164,400.00

CONAGRA FOODS
$1,076,700.00

Here are a few of the top contributors who paid less than a million:

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SYNGENTA CORPORATION
$821,300.00

KELLOGG COMPANY
$632,500.00

GENERAL MILLS, INC.
$519,401.17

HERSHEY COMPANY
$395,100.00

THE J.M. SMUCKER COMPANY
$388,000.00

COUNCIL FOR BIOTECHNOLOGY INFORMATION
$375,000.00

GROCERY MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION
$375,000.00

HORMEL FOODS CORPORATION
$374,300.00

BIMBO BAKERIES USA
$338,300.00

OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRIES, INC.
$301,553.21

PINNACLE FOODS GROUP LLC
$266,100.00

I've always been strongly in favor of GMOs, largely because they can lead to more sustainable farms and healthier foods. And I can understand why companies fear that GMO labeling will alarm potential buyers, since some people have a knee-jerk negative reaction to genetic engineering. Still, it doesn't help GMO makers' cause when they are so nakedly opposing the idea of informing the public about what is a GMO and what isn't. The San Francisco Chronicle reports:

About 70 to 80 percent of processed foods sold in the United States are made with genetically engineered ingredients, including corn, soybeans, sugar beets and cotton oil. Many of these crops have been genetically altered in the laboratory to make them more resistant to pests and invasive weeds, reducing the need for chemical pesticides and making the crops better suited to survive periods of bad weather. Genetically modified crops also significantly increase per-acre yields, reducing the demand for farmland.

If the California measure passes, processed genetically engineered food products would include the words "Partially produced with genetic engineering" on either the front or back label. For whole foods, such as sweet corn and salmon, grocers would be required to have a sign on the shelf. Manufacturers and stores would have 18 months to make the change. Products such as alcohol, most meats, eggs and dairy would be exempt.

The Chron also quotes UCLA molecular biologist Bob Goldberg, who told the paper, "Bioengineered crops are the safest crops in the world. We've been testing them for 40 years. They're like the Model T Ford. There is not one credible scientist working on this that would call it unsafe."

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This makes it even more bizarre that companies are balking at GMO labels being included along with every other piece of health information on foods, like ingredients and nutritional information. Again, resisting the labels makes the GMO industry look like they have something to hide, which ultimately undermines their stated goal of making Americans more comfortable with the fact that we've been eating GMOs for decades.